Three of the teams are Final Four regulars, programs that expect to be practicing and playing in the first week of April, not attending end-of-season banquets.

Trying to pull a postseason surprise is Villanova, a school that might not have the tradition of North Carolina, Michigan State or Connecticut but which does have the biggest shocker in NCAA tournament history on its colorful resume.

Villanova again will enter the Final Four as an underdog, though hardly the kind it was in 1985, when Rollie Massimino’s team was eighth-seeded and shot 78.6 percent to knock a growing Georgetown dynasty off its pedestal.

This time, the Wildcats (30-7) are third-seeded, coached by Jay Wright (with Massimino almost certainly watching from the stands) and have a semifinal meeting set for Saturday against North Carolina.

The other semifinal will be between Connecticut and Michigan State, and there’s little doubt which will have home-court advantage. The Final Four is coming to Detroit, and the Spartans (30-6) are playing only 90 miles from home.

It’s a nice ray of sunshine for a state that has suffered more than most over the past year, when it comes to job losses and the recession.

“I’m just hoping we’re a silver lining in what’s been a little bit of a cloudy year for us,” Spartans coach Tom Izzo said.

“I’m hoping that we’re the sunshine, I’m hoping we’re something to embrace, be involved with, and I hope they all support us because, you know, I haven’t even had time to think about UConn.”

The last team to play the Final Four in its home state was Duke. The Blue Devils lost to Arkansas in the 1994 title game in Charlotte, N.C.

Villanova is, no big surprise, the longshot in this group of four and listed at 8-1 at the Las Vegas Hilton race and sports book. Carolina is the 5-6 favorite, UConn is 5-2 and Michigan State is 5-1.

Jay Kornegay, executive director of the Hilton sports book, said he expects big action on Michigan State because of the nationwide popularity of the Big Ten. And he says Villanova can’t exactly be looked at as the lovable underdog it was back in 1985 – or even the next George Mason, the 2006 longshot – considering the Wildcats come out of the Big East as a No. 3 seed.

“But we’ll see a buildup this week and the Cinderella could be created because they’ll be facing the tournament favorite,” he said.

Carolina (32-4) is an 8-point favorite against ‘Nova; UConn (31-4) is favored by 4 over Michigan State.

Michigan State’s victory over Louisville on Sunday prevented this Final Four from having three teams from the Big East, the way it happened when Villanova won it all in 1985. But there still is a chance of an all-Big East final.

“I’m worried about the next game,” Wright said. “But if history repeats itself, I’ll take it.”

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